
The Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio, a department of the Jewish Federation of San Antonio presents the Hate Ends Now: The Cattle Car Exhibit in San Antonio and South Texas from January 29-February 20, 2024. (Komet Communications, 2024)
Opening night – Monday, January 29 at 5p.m.
Featured Speakers: (in order of appearance):
Nehemia “Nammie” Ichilov, President and CEO, Jewish Federation of San Antonio
Leslie Davis Met, Director, Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio
Mayor Ron Nirenberg, City of San Antonio
Todd Cohn, CEO, Hate Ends now
Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio
12500 NW Military Hwy.
San Antonio, TX 78231
The Hate Ends Now Exhibit is presented through a traveling cattle car replica with moving holographic images and narration by survivors. During a 30-minute, 360-degree immersive presentation for groups of 20-30, students and visitors will be exposed to the development and aftermath of the Holocaust through a collection of imagery and footage dating from 1933-1945. It includes recorded testimonies of Holocaust survivors sharing their personal stories in a holographic virtual presentation. The exhibit will encourage visitors to reflect on the depth of evil while inspiring thoughtful conversations about genocide and indifference.
The cattle car exhibit will be in San Antonio from January 29-February 6 open for free public tours, private tours, visits to local middle schools, and Trinity University. Following its tour in San Antonio, the exhibit will spend two days respectively in Austin, Corpus Christi, McAllen, and Laredo.
Title Sponsors include: The Lubetzky Family Foundation, Texas Holocaust, Genocide and Antisemitism Advisory Commission, Texas Historical Commission. Additional support of the exhibit from The Bar-Yadin Family Foundation, Arlene and David Starr, Spurs Sports and Entertainment, and Dr. Elizabeth Glazier and Dr. Michael Piesman.
The Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio, the only museum of its kind in South Texas, opened its doors in 2000. Since then, thousands of guests have continued to visit and engage in interactive educational programming, customized tours, and intergenerational discussions, bridging the lessons of the past to a brighter future.
Through its customized tours, intergenerational conversations with survivors and their children, and creative educational programming, the Holocaust Memorial Museum aims at forming a community of “Upstanders” throughout South Texas – those who stand up for each other and are not bystanders. Today, the Holocaust Memorial Museum impacts over 40,000 students and visitors annually.